Erratum: maternal mortality in Cameroon: a university teaching hospital report

This erratum corrects article: “Maternal mortality in Cameroon: a university teaching hospital report.” The Pan African Medical Journal. 2015;21:16. doi:10.11604/pamj.2015.21.16.3912


Introduction
Global MMR in 1990 was 430 maternal deaths per 100 000 live births, and overall 576 000 maternal deaths were reported [1]. respectively. Maternal mortality is the leading cause of death among females aged 15-49 years [3]. Yet the vast majority of these deaths are preventable [4]. UN reports revealed worldwide progress towards the achievement of MDG-5. In Cameroon, Maternal mortality ratio has shown an increase from 430 per 100,000 live births in 1991 to 430 in 1998, 669 in 2004, and 782 in 2011 [5].
Hence, Maternal Mortality in Cameroon remains a paradox.
Objective: this study aimed at identifying the potential risk factors for maternal mortality in Cameroon with regards to safe deliveries in order to propose additional preventive measures. Hospital.

Study population:
The population was made up of two groups, one called the "cases group" and the other the "controls group".
Cases were made of all maternal deaths registered over the study period in the teaching hospital. Controls were made up of women who had normal delivery during the same period. Cases were obtained from the delivery room, stillbirths, and hospitalization registers of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the Yaoundé University Teaching Hospital. The controls were gotten from the delivery room register in a 2:1 ratio (2 controls for 1 case) such that the two normal deliveries immediately following the identification of a maternal death were recruited. Both study groups were obtained during the same period. We included as cases, all women who died during the study period because of pregnancy, childbirth, or within 42 days of delivery in this same facility during the same study period. We excluded all cases of deaths which occurred less than 60 minutes of admission and cases whose medical records were not retrieved. The cases were initially identified (n=26), among which, two medical records were not retrieved and finally 24 cases and 48 controls were retained for the study.

Results
During the study period, there were 9045 live births and 26 maternal deaths. The MMR for the study period was 287.5 per 100 000 live births. Among the cases of maternal deaths with known causes, direct causes accounted for 75% of maternal deaths and Page number not for citation purposes 3 indirect causes for the remaining 25%. With regard to the direct causes, hemorrhage was the leading cause of maternal deaths (29.2%). There were 6 cases of postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) and a case of Placenta Praevia. The causes of PPH were bleeding disorders (3/6), uterine atony (2/6) and complete retention of the placenta (1/6). The second common cause of Maternal Mortality was complications of abortion (25%) and these were sepsis (4/6) and severe anemia (2/6). Other causes of MM were ectopic pregnancy (3/24, 12.5%), and hypertensive diseases of pregnancy (2/24, 8.3%). Among the two cases of hypertensive disease in pregnancy, there was one case of intrapartum eclampsia and one case of postpartum eclampsia (

Discussion
During the study period, the MMR was 287.5/100,000 live births.
MMR of 1266.3/100,000 live births was reported in a facility-based study in Maroua Regional hospital [6]. Differences between MMR in the Yaoundé University Teaching Hospital and in Maroua Regional hospital could be due to the fact that Maroua is located in a region dominated by a community wherein cultural factors such as low socio-economic status and neglect of girls and women, polygamy, early marriages and childbearing could account for the high mortality [6]. Majority of the deaths occurred in the age group 24-29 years (33.3%). Teenagers accounted for 8.2% of deaths and in Maroua, the majority of deaths were reported among teenagers (28.6%) [6].These proportions of teenagers among maternal deaths, suggest that the contribution of this age group is proportional to the overall contribution of teenage deliveries in each setting [7]. Others, in Ghana also reported the highest contribution of women aged 24-29 years to maternal deaths even though the contribution was quite similar and varied from 17% to 22% between 20 to 30 years [3]. Unbooked cases represented 37.5% of maternal deaths. Findings from Nigeria revealed 69.26% and 94.2% of unbooked cases among maternal deaths [8]. Another Nigerian study also found that the percentage of maternal deaths for unbooked cases was 10 times that for booked cases, p<0.0001 [9]. The wide confidence interval in our study as reported could be due to the small size of the study population. Given the significance of this variable and the unacceptable high rates of maternal deaths, efforts to further sensitize women on the importance of seeking care during pregnancy should be emphasized.
The main causes of maternal deaths were obstetrical hemorrhage, abortion and sepsis. This observation was similar to previous reports where obstetric hemorrhage was identified as the leading cause of MM contributing to about 33.9% of maternal deaths [10]. Unlike in previous studies where Hypertensive diseases of pregnancy was as the second cause of MM in Semi-urban areas after hemorrhage, it was the fourth cause of maternal deaths in about 8.3% of cases [6,11,12]. Hypertensive disorders are known as conditions complicating 4-10% of pregnancies [13]. Another direct cause of maternal mortality identified in this study was ectopic pregnancy 3/24 (12.5%). Indirect causes were reported in 25% of maternal deaths and similar to previous report from Maroua, Cameroon [6].
Indirect causes included, malaria 2/24 (8.3%), unexplained anemia 2/24 (8.3%), heart disease in pregnancy 1/24 (4.2%), and Page number not for citation purposes 4 pneumonia 1/24 (4.2%). Pneumonia in pregnancy in some studies is directly associated with HIV/AIDS but this relationship could not be established in this study [14]. Though the prevalence of heart disease in pregnancy is poorly documented in the developing countries, and in Cameroon in particular, between 0.9% and 3.7% of pregnancies are complicated with heart disease in industrialized countries [13]. This commonly affects adolescent girls like in our 19year old case and is most often linked to complications of rheumatic heart disease with the mitral valves being the most affected.
Anemia in pregnancy is mainly caused by malaria in malariaendemic zones but this association could not be established in the cases we had in this study. That notwithstanding, emphasis should be laid on prevention of malaria during pregnancy. We acknowledge some shortcomings in this study, including unavailability of registers for maternal deaths which made it really difficult to sort out the deaths, poor documentation and conservation of medical records.
Despite these shortcomings, this study highlights the problem of maternal mortality at the facility level. This can help in the baseline planning of strategies to reduce the MMR at local and national levels.

Conclusion
Maternal mortality at the Yaoundé University Teaching Hospital over the study period was 287.5 deaths/100,000 live births. Causes of death identified were postpartum hemorrhage, complications of unsafe abortion, ectopic pregnancy, pregnancy-induced hypertension and placenta praevia, malaria, anemia, pneumonia, and heart disease. The risk factor directly associated with maternal death in our study was the non attendance at antenatal care. We recommend implementation of maternal mortality surveillance system, and further studies for better understanding of maternal mortality issue in Cameroon.

Acknowledgments
We wish to thank the staff of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University Centre Hospital for their effort in reducing maternal mortality.